Ask HN: How can I delete a Substack account in Australia?
Hello,
Since 10th December, Substack introduced age verification to login to your account. Unfortunately this breaks the process of deleting an account (which requires you to login).
How can I delete my account without completing the video streamed mug shot age verification process?
support@substack.com autoreply directs you to substack.com/contact -- which also requires you to pass age verification first.
The substack AI chatbot is useless - no hope of reaching a human. The process for cancelling a deceased account doesn't work either as the chatbot can't look up my account using my email address (presumably it is frozen until age verification). Tor and VPNs don't work as my profile includes my location in Australia, and my email address is Australian.
Any ideas? I'm about to cancel my credit card as a last resort.
Ask HN: What are you buying your kids for Christmas?
I thought this would be a helpful thing to read what others on the site were getting for their kids, along with the age of those kids. Doesnt have to be tech-oriented.
EDIT: besides robux : D
AI coding is sexy, but accounting is the real low-hanging automation target
Working on automating small business finance (bookkeeping, reconciliation, basic reporting).
One thing I keep noticing: compared to programming, accounting often looks like the more automatable problem:
It’s rule-based Double entry, charts of accounts, tax rules, materiality thresholds. For most day-to-day transactions you’re not inventing new logic, you’re applying existing rules.
It’s verifiable The books either balance or they don’t. Ledgers either reconcile or they don’t. There’s almost always a “ground truth” to compare against (bank feeds, statements, prior periods).
It’s boring and repetitive Same vendors, same categories, same patterns every month. Humans hate this work. Software loves it.
With accounting, at least at the small-business level, most of the work feels like:
normalize data from banks / cards / invoices
apply deterministic or configurable rules
surface exceptions for human review
run consistency checks and reports
The truly hard parts (tax strategy, edge cases, messy history, talking to authorities) are a smaller fraction of the total hours but require humans. The grind is in the repetitive, rule-based stuff.
Ask HN: Should "I asked $AI, and it said" replies be forbidden in HN guidelines?
As various LLMs become more and more popular, so does comments with "I asked Gemini, and Gemini said ....".
While the guidelines were written (and iterated on) during a different time, it seems like it might be time to have a discussion about if those sort of comments should be welcomed on HN or not.
Some examples:
- https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46164360
- https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46200460
- https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46080064
Personally, I'm on HN for the human conversation, and large LLM-generated texts just get in the way of reading real text from real humans (assumed, at least).
What do you think? Should responses that basically boil down to "I asked $LLM about $X, and here is what $LLM said:" be allowed on HN, and the guidelines updated to state that people shouldn't critique it (similar to other guidelines currently), or should a new guideline be added to ask people from refrain from copy-pasting large LLM responses into the comments, or something else completely?
Ask HN: Relatively SoTA LLM Agents from Scratch?
As we know, OpenAI is not so open.
In 2023, I was playing with transformers, RNNs and I had an understanding how it worked from top to bottom (e.g. made my own keras, could whiteboard small nets) and I can throw things together in keras or tf pretty quick
I got a job and never touched that again. Data and compute notwithstanding, how hard would it be to make a pet project foundation model using the latest techniques? I’ve heard about MoE, things like that and I figure we’re not just throwing a bunch of layers and dropout in Keras anymore.
Practical Tips for Gemini 3
1. Turn Any Screenshot into a Structured Note Screenshot (meeting notes/webpage/paper/etc.): Extract key text; Summarize as clear bullet points; Create 3–5 to-dos with due dates & owners (TBD). 2. “One‑Click” Spreadsheet Analyst “upload a spreadsheet image / CSV of your data. Describe the main patterns in plain language. Suggest 3 charts that best explain the data and describe what each chart should show. Point out anomalies or data quality issues.” 3. Context‑Aware Refactor Coach for Code
“From screenshots/pasted text, infer code architecture and file roles. Suggest a step-by-step refactor plan. For Step 1 only: provide exact code changes—await your approval before Step 2.” 4. Auto‑Generate Test Cases from Real UIs
“Upload app/web screenshots → Identify interactive elements → Generate test-case table: [Element, Expected behavior, Edge cases] → Suggest automated test ideas for Playwright/Cypress/Appium (no full code).” 5. Act as a cautious research assistant:
“Given a claim, identify likely accurate, questionable, and clearly wrong parts. For questionable points, suggest source types & keywords to verify. Rewrite the claim more accurately while preserving nuance.”
Ask HN: Can someone explain why OpenAI credits expire?
I was surprised to find out only recently that some credits I bought about a year a go were unusable because they had expired. I find this a bit concerning because it seems as though I'm being forced to use the credits.
In my part of the world, that tactic is used by telcos to sell "broadband data". You buy internet bundle of about $1 and they give you expiry of about a week. This drives up the "real" price of these purchases because of the time constraint. Ultimately, if you had 1GB of data left after a week, it is all gone and you have to purchase again - further driving sales. Since this is a third world country we're talking about and telco's tend to be oligopolies and tend to also do some form of price collusion among themselves, it was generally accepted as "just how things were".
But I always found it to be unfair because people should be allowed to take their time consuming whatever product they purchased.
I wonder if this is general practice for all llm apis? Am I missing something? Is this really how things should be? I can't seem to fathom why "purchased" llm credits should have an expiry date - however generous. Especially when the same credits can be used to access any of their available models.
Ask HN: Has anyone been able to renew their IEEE this month?
I’m trying to renew my IEEE membership, but the Payment page keeps erroring out regardless of credit card.
Worse, I can’t seem to reach anyone at IEEE through email, phone calls, or the web form. Is anyone able to get through?
Why are "remote" jobs in late 2025 still limited to hiring in US/CA/UK/DE?
Throughout 2025, I've been following job boards like YC Jobs, RemoteOK, NoDesk, WeWorkRemotely, and others. Across all of them, I keep seeing a recurring pattern:
Many companies advertise "remote" roles, but hiring is limited to the US, Canada, UK, or Germany. Sometimes they add one or two more countries, but rarely anything beyond that.
Given that it's the last quarter of 2025 and remote work is more established than ever, I'm trying to understand the reasoning behind this.
A few questions I'm hoping founders, hiring managers, or people with international hiring experience can shed light on:
- Is the main blocker regulatory complexity? (employment law, compliance, local registrations, PE risk, etc.)
- Is it primarily about taxes and payroll overhead when hiring abroad?
- Are there security or liability concerns that make certain jurisdictions easier to work with?
- Is it simply the cost of maintaining compliant employment structures worldwide, or are there deeper strategic reasons?
- And finally: Is there evidence that the value produced by strong engineers abroad doesn't offset those costs, or is the issue not economic at all?
I'm asking out of genuine curiosity, from the outside, it seems like a global talent pool should be an advantage, especially for remote-first companies. But the hiring restrictions persist, even as tools like Deel, Remote, Oyster, etc. mature.
I'd love to hear perspectives from people who have dealt with this firsthand.
Console.text() – SMS alerts when code executes
Hey HN! I built console.text() - a tool that texts you when specific code paths execute in production.
The idea came from Jason Goodison's YouTube video about micro-SaaS products. I'd been stuck in tutorial hell for months, so I decided to just ship something.
What it does:
npm install @holler2660/console-text
const { init } = require("@holler2660/console-text");
init({ apiKey: 'ct_live_xxx' });
console.text('Payment failed', { userId: '123' });
// → SMS arrives in 5-10 seconds
Try it: https://soorajdmg.github.io/Console-text/
Why this vs Sentry/PagerDuty?
Those are great for teams. This is for solo devs and side projects who want dead-simple alerts without the setup overhead. If you know console.log(), you already know how to use it.
Ask HN: What hard problems are still underexplored?
Problem with ambiguous boundaries, messy constraints and no linear path to a solution
Is any of you using LLMs to create full features in big enterprise apps?
Let me be clear first. I don't dislike LLMs, I query them, trigger agents to do stuff where I kind of know what the end goal is and to make analisys of small parts of an application.
That said, everytime I give it something a little more complex that do something in a single file script it fails me horribly. Either the code is really bad, or the approach is as bad a someone who doesn't really know what to do or it plains start doing things that I explicitly said not to do in the initial prompt.
I have sometimes asked my LLM fan's coworkers to come and help when that happens and they also are not able to "fix it", but somehow I am the one doing it wrong due "wrong prompt" or "lack of correct context".
I have created a lot of "Agents.md" files, drop files into the context window... Nothing.
When I need to do green field stuff, or PoCs it delivers fast, but then applying it to work inside an existent big application fails.
The only place where I feel as "productive" as I heard from other people is when I do stuff in languages or technologies I don't know at all, but then again, I also don't know if that functional code I get at the end is broken in things I am not aware of.
Are any of you guys really using LLMs to create full features in big enterprise apps?
Ask HN: What are young technically minded people reading?
When I was young we read books like Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman! by Richard Feynman, Neuromancer by William Gibson and So You Want to be a Mathematician by Paul Halmos. What books are popular with young technically minded people today?
Ask HN: How do small businesses handle phone calls?
If you run or work at a small business: cell phones, landline, VoIP, or something else?
What sucks about your current setup?
What would you like to see instead?
Ask HN: Is there a "good" (non-privacy horror) aftermarket HUD for your car?
I was surprised to see these kind of things on Amazon at $50-$100.
https://www.amazon.com/s?k=android+auto+screen&i=electronics&crid=1VL1XF920KHXS&sprefix=android+auto+screen%2Celectronics%2C109&ref=nb_sb_noss_1
I have an older car (2018 Mini Countryman), and the lack of Android Auto is problematic. When I rent a car I realize how much easier life is with a fully integrated experience, especially for maps.
Are there any HUDs that people have found success with, which also respect privacy and aren't a support nightmare. I'm worried I will buy one and find out the integration is terrible, or that it is sending my data back to a Myanmar based call center.
Has anyone tried to build one using an android tablet?
Ask HN: How can I learn smartphone repair online?
Context:
I prefer smaller phones and currently use an iPhone 13 Mini which I plan on using for another 3 years. Sadly the battery keeps on dying and I'm on my second battery. I prefer repairing myself since most of the local shops provide lower quality batteries and I'm a bit paranoid of leaving phone there. My screen is also broken and also the back glass. I'm thinking of ordering few replacement parts from Aliexpress and was wondering if there are any good resources to learn other than phone specific guides on ifixit.
Ask HN: Are there any viable Android phones for a power user to buy nowadays?
i have a pixel 4, and it looks like i might be stuck with this phone forever if things keep going in the same direction (hopefully they don't). the pixel 4 isn't bad, but even on this i don't have the level of customization that i had back in the day with cyanogenmod etc. on my note 3 or epic 4g touch.
here are some requirements that i can think of:
- not huge. small enough to use with 1 hand
- able to root and install custom OS without too much difficulty/annoyance (the manufacturer doesn't actively try to stop you from modifying your own device)
- able to use mint mobile
- has a trackball (like the htc hero, that thing was fuckin awesome)
- possibly some hardware buttons
Ask HN: Is it still worth learning a new programming language?
I have been writing Python code for a few years now. But I feel like LLMs can write much better code than me. I used to keep myself updated with newer technology. But now I am loosing interest. I was interested in learning Rust. But I don't find any motivation now since I can just vibe code with Rust. Any thoughts in that?
What's Next? Clippy Copilot?
I'm sure there's more, but Copilot gave up.
- Microsoft Copilot
- Microsoft Copilot Pro
- Microsoft 365 Copilot
- Microsoft 365 Copilot Chat
- Microsoft Security Copilot
- Microsoft Copilot in Intune
- Microsoft Copilot Studio
- Microsoft Copilot in Edge
- Microsoft Copilot in Windows
- Microsoft Copilot in WhatsApp
- Microsoft Copilot in GroupMe
- GitHub Copilot
Cursor and Claude Opus 4.5 is a game changer
The combination of the two delivers on the promise: fast and clever editing of multiple files in a codebase, with minimal human intervention.
No other model I tried in Cursor comes even close.
Question: did anyone tried Claude Codex: as good as Cursor?
Ask HN: Is it just me or techno-optimism died in the past few years?
I see people all around me who have this bleak, pessimistic view of where everything is going. That art/originality is fading, that technology is causing more harm than good, and that most jobs now exist to feed some mindless machine where sole goal is to get people addicted. Tech roles feel drained of purpose, and non-tech roles are being eaten away.
This outlook is a stark contrast to the era I grew up in. From 2010 to 2020, tech optimism was at its peak. Despite the flaws, companies like Airbnb, Uber, Amazon, and countless SaaS startups felt like they were genuinely improving things—breaking old monopolies and building better systems.
Now we have AI, arguably the most transformative technology of our lifetime, yet a lot of times the reaction seems to be exhaustion rather than excitement. Sure, people love using it, but unlike the early Internet, AI doesn't seem like a medium for creativity. The core value feels just about compressing the time it takes to do what we were already doing.
Maybe it’s age. Maybe it’s just me. And maybe I am bitten by false nostalgia. But I’m curious: how are others seeing this shift?
Ask HN: Why does every B2B SaaS have to look like Linear/Stripe?
I'm a founder (and ex-architect) building a logistics OS. Recently, I received feedback that my site looks "cheap and ugly" because I used Serif fonts and an engraving style aesthetic instead of the standard Sans-Serif "Clean Tech" look.
My intent was to evoke the "Age of Exploration" vibe, since the AI era feels like charting unknown territories. But users seem conditioned to trust only "Standard Blue SaaS UI."
My question to HN: Does a B2B tool have to follow the "Standard Modern UI" to be taken seriously? Or is there room for distinctive, maybe even polarizing, aesthetics in enterprise software?
I'm debating whether to cave in and redesign to "boring but safe" or double down on our soul. Would love to hear your thoughts on "Brand Distinctiveness vs. UI Familiarity."